Drinking wine is easy:
tilt glass and swallow. Tasting wine is more of a challenge. You need special
tools, the proper environment, keen concentration, a good memory and a vivid
imagination. But after three or four glasses, the basic effect is the same either
way. So why bother? I'm a baseball fan. When I take a friend who knows nothing
about the sport to the ballpark, he may enjoy the crowd, down a hot dog, cheer
if someone hits a home run. The rest of the time he's asking me, What's the
big deal? One guy throws a ball, the other guy misses it. But for me, every
pitch is a small drama: what the pitcher chooses to throw, how the defense sets
up, where the batter tries to hit it, how the strategies play out. When nine
innings are over, we both know the score. But while my friend may have passed
a pleasant afternoon, I've been totally absorbed in the game.
Life can be lived in a casual way, or plumbed to the depths. We
all choose how and where to spend our energy and attention. You may play music,
cook seriously, tend a lovely garden. Maybe the things you love aren't vital,
but they make life richer. Passion is never wasted effort.
That's why wine lovers learn to taste. We know that the effort
we put into understanding and appreciating wine—as opposed to simply enjoying
it (or its psychotropic effects)—pays big dividends. Really tasting wine adds
an extra dimension to the basic daily routines of eating and drinking. It turns
obligation into pleasure, a daily necessity into a celebration of life.
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The
Components Of Tasting: |
Set
and Setting
So what is wine tasting all about? Like any skill, serious tasting
requires a combination of technique and experience. The more you do it, the
better you become. Given an unidentified wine, an expert taster, using only
his senses and his memory, can pick out the grape variety, the wine's vintage,
its region of origin, even the specific winery that produced it.
That's the myth. In fact, if the wine is served at room temperature
and the taster is blindfolded, most can't even tell whether it's red or white.
Harry Waugh, an English wine expert who has been tasting for nearly 80 years,
was once asked if he had ever mistaken st1:State
w:st="on">Burgundy for Bordeaux.
"Not since lunch," he replied.
Blind tasting is a great parlor game. But the real goal is to
understand a wine, not to unmask it. Through a concentrated application of all
the senses, and by comparison of the immediate sense data with memories of other
wines tasted, the serious taster can decipher a wine's biography to an amazing
extent, including the growing season that produced it, the approach of the winemaker
who created it and its relation to other wines of similar type or origin. Every
bottle of wine is a message, the physical embodiment of a specific place and
time captured and transmitted for the pleasure of the taster. Open a bottle
of 1961 red Bordeaux
and even a generation later the dusty warmth of that long, hot summer floods
the dining room.
Even more, though, wine is a catalyst. The effort to understand
it through tasting, and to share that understanding with other tasters, creates
a common experience that builds bonds between people. The great French enologist
Emile Peynaud emphasized this aspect of tasting in his landmark book, The Taste
of Wine:
"Great wine has that marvelous quality of immediately establishing
communication between those who are drinking it. Tasting it at table should
not be a solitary activity and fine wine should not be drunk without comment.
There are few pleasures which loosen the tongue as much as that of sharing wine,
glass in hand. In essence it is easy to describe what one senses provided one
has made a sufficient effort to notice it. What is clearly perceived can be
clearly expressed."
The techniques of tasting enhance the ability to perceive wine
clearly. They're actually pretty simple and follow logically through a well-defined
series of steps. Some of the procedures may seem unnatural or pretentious to
the uninitiated, but they've been developed over centuries to achieve specific
ends. After a while, they become automatic. Swirling wine in the glass to release
the aromas may feel clumsy at first, but now I often find myself at the table
swirling my glass of water. At Wine Spectator, the editors taste nearly 8,000
wines a year. Here's how we do it.
First of all, consider the circumstances. Not all wines deserve
or repay close analysis. If you're drinking white Zinfandel out of paper cups
at a picnic, any attempt to taste seriously will be wasted effort and probably
perceived as snobbery. Professional tasters prefer a day-lit, odor-free room
with white walls and tabletops, in order to throw the wine into the clearest
possible relief, but in the end it's a sterile environment that improves analysis
at the cost of pleasure. To maximize both enjoyment and understanding, serve
your wine at a dinner party with friends; comfortable chairs, warm light and
good food create an ambience where the wines—and the guests—can express themselves
without constraint or reproach.
Remember that tasting is not a test—your subjective response is
more important than any "right answers." The bottom line is: Wine that tastes
good to you is good wine.
And no matter how advanced your technique, tasting is not an exact
science. Sensitivities vary widely when it comes to flavor and aroma. These
differences are both physiological and cultural. When test groups of French
and Germans were given wine with 8 grams of sugar per liter, 92 percent of the
Germans called the wine "dry" while only 7 percent of the French did. Their
reference points were different: German whites are more often frankly sweet
than French ones, so the German tasters were less sensitive to sugar in their
wines.
The goal in tasting wine is not to "find" the same aromas and
flavors some other taster is describing. If you hone your own perceptual abilities
and develop your own vocabulary to articulate them, you'll not only derive more
pleasure from the wine itself, but also stimulate better communication between
you and the friends who are sharing the bottle.
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Looking
at Wine
The first step in your examination is visual. Fill the glass about
one-third full, never more than half-full. Pick it up by the stem. This may
feel awkward at first, or affected, but there are good reasons: Holding the
glass by its bowl hides the liquid from view; fingerprints blur its color; the
heat of your hand alters the wine's temperature. Peynaud says, "Offer someone
a wine glass and you can tell immediately by the way they hold it whether or
not they are connoisseurs."
Focus in turn on hue, intensity and clarity. Each requires a different
way of looking. The true color, or hue, of the wine is best judged by tilting
the glass and looking at the wine through the rim, to see the variation from
the deepest part of the liquid to its edges. Intensity can best be gauged looking
straight down through the wine from above. Clarity—whether the wine is brilliant,
or cloudy with particles—is most evident when light is shining sideways through
the glass.
Each of these elements reveals different aspects of a wine's character
and quality; I'll detail these later. But don't forget simply to enjoy the wine's
color. No other liquid is as vivid and variegated, or reflects light with such
joy and finesse. There's good reason wine's appearance is often compared to
ruby and garnet, topaz and gold.
Next comes the swirling. This too can feel unnatural, even dangerous
if your glass is too full and your clothing brand-new. But besides stirring
up the full range of colors, it prepares the wine for the next step, the olfactory
examination. The easiest way to swirl is to rest the base of the glass on a
table, hold the stem between thumb and forefinger, and gently rotate the wrist.
Right-handers will find a counter-clockwise motion easiest, left-handers the
reverse.
Move the glass until the wine is dancing, climbing nearly to the
rim. Then stop. As the liquid settles back into the bottom of the glass, a transparent
film will appear on the inside of the bowl, falling slowly and irregularly down
the sides in the wine's "tears" or "legs." "Experts" derive meanings from them
as various and profound as fortune-tellers do from looking at tea leaves, but
in truth they're simply an indication of the amount of alcohol in the wine:
the more alcohol, the more tears. Remember that when you're considering whether
to open another bottle.
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Smelling
Wine
When you stop swirling, and the tears are falling, it's time to
take the next step: smelling. Agitating the wine vaporizes it, and the thin
sheet of liquid on the sides of the glass evaporates rapidly; the result is
an intensification of the aromas. If the glass narrows at the top, the aromas
are further concentrated. Stick your nose right into the bowl and inhale.
There's no consensus about the proper sniffing technique. Some
advocate two or three quick inhalations; others prefer one deep, sharp sniff.
I've seen tasters close one nostril, sniff, then close the other and sniff again.
The goal is to draw the aromas deep into the nose, to bring them into contact
with the olfactory mucosa and thence to the olfactory bulb, where the sensations
are registered and deciphered. It's a remote and protected place, and a head
cold or allergies will effectively block it off from even the strongest aromas.
But with practice, and keen attention, you'll learn how to maximize your perception
of aromas, and then how to decipher them.
The world of smell is vast and bewildering. First of all, our
olfactory equipment is incredibly sensitive; we can distinguish aromas in quantities
so small that laboratory equipment can scarcely measure them. Second, our analytic
capacity is extraordinary; estimates of the number of different smells humans
can identify range up to 10,000! Finally, wine has a staggering number of smellable
elements. In their exhaustive study Wines: Their Sensory Evaluation, Maynard
Amerine and Edward Roessler, both professors at the University of California,
write that "Identified in wine aromas are at least 181 esters, 52 alcohols,
75 aldehydes and ketones, 22 acetals, 18 lactones, six secondary acetamides,
29 nitrogen-containing compounds, 18 sulfur-containing compounds, two ethers,
11 furans and 18 epoxides, as well as 30 miscellaneous compounds. Many of these
are modified in various ways by aging and cellar treatment, and they can and
do react with each other or have additive, masking or synergistic properties."
Serious wine tasters love to identify smells. "Chocolate!" cries
one. "Burnt matches!" insists another. "Tea, tobacco, mushrooms and a bit of
the old barnyard," intones a third. Are they just playing word games?
Let's face it: Contemporary American culture turns up its nose
at strong smells. We deodorize our bodies, our homes and our cars; everything
from hand lotion to dishwashing detergent comes "lemony fresh," to give the
impression of cleanliness and neutrality. It's no wonder we lack the language
to describe the complex, fleeting sensations that evanesce from a half-filled
glass of wine.
But in fact, wine does smell of more than grapes. Analysis of
its volatile components has identified the same molecules that give many familiar
objects their distinctive scents. Here are just a few: rose, iris, cherry, peach,
honey and vanilla. Who's to say that some of the more imaginative descriptors—from
road tar to cat's pee, sweaty socks to smoked bacon—aren't grounded in some
basic chemical affinity?
As with color, wine's aromas offer insights into character, origin
and history. Because our actual sense of taste is limited to four simple categories
(the well-known sweet, sour, bitter and salt), aroma is the most revealing aspect
of our examination. But don't simply sniff for clues. Revel in the sensation.
Scientists say smells have direct access to the brain, connecting immediately
to memory and emotion. Like a lover's perfume, or the scent of cookies from
childhood, wine's aromas can evoke a specific place and time with uncanny power.
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Tasting
Wine
Now comes the best part. You can be mesmerized by wine's flashing
colors and hypnotized into dreamy reverie by its evocative aromas, but actually
drinking the wine is what loosens the tongue, opens the arms and consummates
the liquid's true purpose.
You might think it's the easiest part, too. After all, you learned
to drink from a cup when you were 2 years old and have been practicing diligently
ever since. But there's a huge distinction between swallowing and tasting, the
same gulf that yawns between simply hearing and truly listening. Once again,
correct technique is essential to full appreciation.
With the aromas still reverberating through your senses, put the
glass to your lips and take some liquid in. How much? That depends on the size
of your mouth. But too little is as ineffective as too much. I find that one-third
to one-half an ounce is just about right. You need to have enough volume to
work it all around your tasting apparatus, but not so much that you're forced
to swallow right away.
Because you don't want to swallow, not just yet. It takes time
and effort to force the wine to divulge its secrets. I keep a pleasant wine
in my mouth for 10 to 15 seconds, sometimes more.
Roll the wine all around your mouth, bringing it into contact
with every part, because each decodes a different aspect of the liquid. Wine
provokes sensations, too: The astringency of tannins is most perceptible on
the inner cheeks; the heat of the alcohol burns in the back of the throat.
The strength of these taste sensations can be amplified through
specialized techniques that, frankly, are more appropriate to the tasting lab
than the dining room. But if the wine is seductive enough, you may not be able
to resist. First, as you hold the wine in your mouth, purse your lips and inhale
gently through them. This creates a bubbling noise children find immensely amusing.
It also accelerates vaporization, intensifying the aromas. Second, chew the
wine vigorously, sloshing it around in your mouth, to draw every last nuance
of flavor from the wine.
Don't forget the finish. After you swallow, exhale gently and
slowly through both your nose and mouth. The retronasal passage, which connects
the throat and the nose, is another avenue for aromas, which can linger long
after the wine is finally swallowed. You'll find that the better the wine, the
more complex, profound and long-lasting these residual aromas can be. With great
wines, sensitive tasters and minimal distractions, the finish can last a minute
or more. It's a moment of meditation and communion that no other beverage can
create.
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Clues
From Color
A wine's color gives many clues to its character. First, color
reflects the specific variety of grape (or grapes) the wine is made from. Take
two common red grapes, Cabernet Sauvignon and Pinot Noir. Cabernet berries are
typically smaller, with thicker, darker skins, than Pinot Noir. As a result,
wines based on Cabernet tend to show darker colors, leaning toward purple and
black, instead of the ruby tones associated with Pinot.
Second, color is influenced by growing conditions in the vineyard.
A warm summer and dry autumn produce grapes that are fully ripe, with a high
ratio of skin to juice, resulting in dark colors. A cool summer or a rainy harvest
can result in unripe or diluted grapes, which will show up in colors with lighter
hues and less intensity.
Vinification techniques can also affect color. When red wines
ferment, the grape skins are left to macerate in the juice, like a tea bag steeping
in warm water. The elements that create color, the anthocyanins, are found in
the skins, not the juice itself (most grapes, even red varieties, have clear
juice), so the longer the skins steep, the darker the color will be. Even after
fermentation is over and the skins are discarded, some solid material remains
in suspension in the wine. Some winemakers choose to remove this material, through
fining or filtering; others believe the wine benefits from a little residual
deposit.
Time in bottle—the inevitable process of aging—also has an impact.
Young red wines are full of anthocyanins, and so their colors are deeper; with
maturity, these coloring elements evolve, lightening through red to colors described
as "brick" or "amber," slowly combining and falling out of suspension in the
wine, creating a sediment in the bottom of the bottle.
So if you pour a glass of red wine and look at it closely, you
may find a deep garnet color, with good intensity but not brilliantly clear.
You might reasonably infer that the wine is made from Cabernet Sauvignon grown
in a warm climate, that the winemaker chose to extend maceration and to filter
only lightly, and that it's from a recent good vintage. If the tasting's not
blind and you already know what the wine is, you can compare its color with
what you might expect: Perhaps it's exceptionally dark for a weak vintage, indicating
good grape-growing or winemaking abilities, or maybe it's already faded for
its age, suggesting that the grapes lacked concentration, or the winemaker was
unable to extract the intensity that allows wines to mature with grace and complexity.
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What
Wine Is
Wine tasting offers us the best route to understanding the messages
hidden in the bottle. You can think of them as poetic, or autobiographical.
Poetry comes easily to sensitive palates confronted with great
wines. It's harder work to tease out the facts that create these feelings. After
all,as Peynaud puts it so bluntly, "Considered from a chemical point of view,
wine is a hydro-alcoholic solution containing 20 to 30 grams of substances in
solution, which constitute the extract and give it flavor, and several hundred
milligrams of volatile substances, which constitute its odor." By deciphering
these diverse substances, an attentive taster can learn a great deal about the
wine they compose.
Every wine is a complex web made up of natural and man-made components.
The final taste is determined by forces as non-negotiable as the number of hours
of sunlight during the grapes' growing season, and decisions as personal as
whether the grape juice should macerate on its skins for 10 days or two weeks
or a month. While no introductory guide can even attempt to link all the ways
flavor reflects the particular history of a wine, the more of them tasters can
identify, the more complete their appreciation will be. Here are a few of the
most important links between the real world and the liquid. I'll use a hypothetical
Cabernet Sauvignon as an example.
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Clues
From Aroma
Every step of the tasting will add more information to the equation,
modifying the conclusions you're drawing about the wine. Aroma is the most complex
element, and the most revealing to the experienced taster. Some commentators
divide the aromatic components into several classes: those produced by the grapes
themselves, those introduced by the chemical processes of winemaking and, finally,
those that result from the evolution of the wine over time in the bottle. Sometimes
the first two classes, which are most distinctive when the wine is young, are
called the "aroma," while the third, which emerges only in maturity, is called
the "bouquet."
As with color, grape variety and growing season are powerful determinants
of aroma. Pinot Noir typically smells of red fruits like cherries and strawberries.
Cabernet Sauvignon, like its color, tends to have darker aromas, typically black
cherries or plums.
Winemaking techniques dramatically affect aromas. The yeasts that
cause fermentation are sometimes chosen by the winemakers and added to the juice
specifically because of the aromatic and flavor nuances they create. Cool fermentations
yield vibrant, fruity aromas; warmer ones give more spicy and earthy notes.
The biggest aromatic impact comes after fermentation, when the
wine is racked off the skins and held for clarification and maturation before
bottling. Some Cabs are simply pumped into large vats, generally made of stainless
steel, epoxied concrete or old wood. The large volume of the liquid and the
neutral character of the container emphasize the fruit character inherent in
the wine. Other (generally more ambitious and expensive) wines are racked into
small (60-gallon) oak barrels. If the barrels are old, they too will be basically
neutral, adding little in the way of flavor or aroma. If they are new, however,
the wine absorbs elements from the wood that can add aromas (and flavors) of
vanilla, smoke, toast, coffee, even chocolate. These aromas will vary in character
and intensity depending on whether the oak is French or American in origin,
how much the inside of the barrels have been charred, or "toasted," and what
percentage of the barrels are new.
Time in bottle also influences aromas. Young red wines smell of
fruit; as they age, their bouquet evolves into complex perfumes that mingle
cedar, tobacco, tea, mushrooms and spices. Different cultures prefer one stage
over the other; the French drink their reds vigorous and fruity, while the English
favor the softer, more earthy aromas of mature wines. Young wines can be delicious,
but a great wine aged to perfect maturity is a glorious experience, and once
sniffed will never be forgotten.
So when you smell our hypothetical Cabernet and find scents that
remind you of plums or blackberries, joined by aromas of vanilla and toast,
you can reasonably assume the wine is young, made from ripe grapes and aged
in a high percentage of new barrels—the "formula" that most often results in
concentrated, age-worthy wines. If there are herbal, vegetal or other "green"
notes, you may suspect the growing season was cool or short, preventing the
grapes from achieving complete maturity. If the fruit smells "cooked," ripe
and sweet like jam or even raisins, overripe fruit from a long, hot summer is
a likely cause.
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Clues
From Taste
Finally you taste the wine, and the last evidence falls into place.
Our taste buds are blunt instruments—most of what we "taste" is actually perceived
by our sense of smell—but they do add basic information, particularly about
sweetness and acidity. Just as important are other physical sensations perceived
in the mouth, such as a wine's body, astringency and level of alcohol.
A wine's alcohol level results primarily from the ripeness of
the grapes at harvest (more sugar in the grapes equals more strength in the
wine) plus, where it's permitted, from additional sugar added during fermentation
(a process called chaptalization). Most table wines contain from 7 to 14 percent
alcohol naturally, and winemakers generally chaptalize where necessary to reach
levels of 12 to 13 percent (though it's almost always illegal to boost a wine
more than two degrees, or percent, through added sugar). Higher alcohol levels
give wines richer textures and fuller bodies. Alcohol also provides a subliminal
sweetness that's necessary to balance acid and bitter components inevitably
present in wine.
Acidity is also inherent in the grapes, though in hot climates
(and where it's legal) winemakers may add some tartaric or citric acid to balance
the sugar in ultraripe fruit. Acidity can also be manipulated through a process
called malolactic fermentation (this is actually a bacterial activity, not a
true fermentation). The process takes place after alcoholic fermentation, almost
always in red wines and selectively in whites, according to the winemaker's
vision of the wine. It transforms rather harsh malic acid (the kind found in
green apples) to softer, rounder lactic acid (the kind found in milk), yielding
softer wines that, especially in whites, often show marked buttery or creamy
flavors.
Tannins are elements extracted primarily from grape skins (and
so found mostly in red wines), but which can derive from stems or seeds, and
also from oak, especially new oak barrels. They're perceived as an astringent
feeling. Young red wines meant for long aging are pumped full of tannins, by
extending the maceration period or otherwise enhancing their extraction, because
tannins act as a preservative and their chemical evolution toward softer, silkier
textures is part of the maturation of great wines.
Back to our Cab. In the mouth, you may note a marked astringency,
plenty of fruit and very little tartness. When you swallow, there's a warm feeling
in the back of your throat followed by a long aftertaste. You can reasonably
assume that the wine is made from ripe grapes, possibly grown in a warm climate,
and that the winemaker emphasized extraction to produce a long-lived wine. If
the wine is too alcoholic and lacking in acidity, the grapes may have gotten
too ripe before they were picked; if the tannins are too harsh, the winemaker
may have left the juice on the skins for too long, aiming to make a super-wine
but winding up with a bodybuilder, impressive in youth but unlikely to maintain
its form.
Don't stop concentrating when you swallow, though. The finish—the
taste that lingers for seconds, even minutes, when the wine is gone—is the wine's
farewell. If it's short, the wine is simple and probably meant for early drinking.
The longer it is, no matter what its age, the better the chances you have a
winner.
With age the tannins soften and the wine, which may be a collection
of impressive but disparate impressions in its youth, will become more harmonious
and complex. One of the most important and least certain judgments a wine taster
makes is when a wine will reach its peak, achieve a point when all its elements
come into alignment, creating a seamless web of color, aroma and flavor. One
reason to invest in a wine by the case is to follow its evolution through the
years. This maximizes your chances of catching the wine at its best.
So our hypothetical tasting is over. Given an unknown red wine,
we've determined that it has a deep garnet color, offers vibrant aromas and
flavors of blackberries and toast, and is full-bodied and firmly tannic on the
palate, with a long, clean finish. We can make a good guess that it's a young
California Cab from a good vintage that's been made to develop with age and
that, while it's attractive to drink now, it will be smoother and more complex
after two or three years in the bottle. (Of course, we won't be surprised if
it's from Bordeaux or Australia
or even from some completely different grape!)
If we know that the wine we're drinking is, say, Beringer Cabernet
Sauvignon Napa Valley Private Reserve 1992 ($45, rated 95 points or "classic"
by Wine Spectator editors), we can agree that it delivers on its promises and
happily put our other bottles safely in the cellar for a special dinner down
the road.
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Understanding
Wine
Most of the time, most of us drink young, simple wines. What you
taste is what you get—they may be flavorful and refreshing, but they don't repay
extended analysis. Even so, it can be amusing to taste them blind, to try to
reach back through the wine to its components: grape variety, vintage quality,
winemaking techniques.
Sometimes we splurge, drinking a bottle from a topflight producer
in a great vintage. Then, good tasting technique is essential to full appreciation.
If the setting or the company is distracting, or we can't be bothered to concentrate
on the data our senses are providing, then we've wasted our money and insulted
the winemaker and the wine. Recently a Wine Spectator editor dined with a wealthy
collector who opened 17 bottles for eight guests, serving them almost completely
at random, pairing, for example, 1985 Krug Champagne and 1929 Château Mouton-Rothschild
as apéritifs. Appreciation is impossible when conspicuous consumption is filling
the glass. But when you put senses and imagination to work, tasting a great
wine can be more than a great pleasure; its memory can illuminate all the other
wines we drink, majestic and modest, from then on.
And once in a while we get lucky. Every passionate wine lover
tells the same story: a special night, close companions, an extraordinary bottle
of wine. Maybe it's an old Burgundy,
fragile and recalcitrant at first, blossoming into magical complexity. Maybe
it's a honeyed Château d'Yquem drunk with an unctuous terrine of foie gras,
proving that a sophisticated disdain for "sweet wines" was utterly mistaken.
Suddenly we have the impression that rather than analyzing the wine we're practically
worshiping it, and what began as superficial sensory pleasure becomes as profound
as a religious conversion. Eating and drinking will never be quite the same
again.
Life goes on. Corks are pulled, glasses broken, wine racks fill
and empty and fill again. If we're paying attention along the way, though, our
memory's cellar grows and grows, and every addition adds meaning and value to
each wine we drink. Here's Peynaud again, nearly 70 now, reflecting on a lifetime
of wine drinking:
"The world of wine is infinite," he writes. "How could I possibly
commit to memory the thousands of wines that I have tasted from all over the
world? The rate at which I taste now has gone beyond the limits of memory, it
is wasteful in effect. Nonetheless, I still have the notes of all my tastings
and every now and again I leaf through them; the experience is like looking
at the pictures in a travel album which can take me back in time and space."
Wine tasting is a technique that can enhance our everyday experience
of eating and drinking. But it can also be a way of life that enriches our perceptions
and deepens our connections with every aspect of the sensory world. That's a
large claim for a common activity, but those who know wine well know it to be
true.
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Getting
the Most From Wine
Accurate and complete wine tasting depends primarily on the concentration
and perspicacity of the taster. But the right tools and an efficient approach
can make a big difference, too.
Technical details include the serving temperature of the wine,
proper opening and pouring methods, the decision whether or not to decant the
bottle and appropriate stemware.
The "correct" temperature, like so many details in wine tasting,
is ultimately a matter of personal preference. I know Southerners who simply
cannot drink a beverage without ice, and that includes Montrachet and Yquem.
But wine temperature influences wine flavor and there are good reasons to follow
time-tested practices.
Cold temperatures enhance the perception of bitterness; warm ones
increase the impact of sweetness and alcohol. According to French enologist
Emile Peynaud, "the same red wine will seem thin and hot at 72° F, supple and
fluid at 64°, full and astringent at 50°." So a powerful, tannic red should
be poured warm enough to minimize its astringency, but not so warm as to emphasize
its alcohol. We drink sweet white wines well chilled to keep their sweetness
in balance.
We recommend serving full-bodied and mature red wines at 60° to
65°F, light-bodied young reds at 55° to 60°, dry whites at 45° to 50° and sweet
whites at 40° to 50°. Remember that the wine will warm up in the glass, since
most dining rooms are heated to 70° or more, so it's better to serve them a
couple of degrees too cold than too warm.
The way you open the bottle won't normally affect its flavors,
but as part of the ceremony of wine it helps put the tasters in a receptive
mood. If a capsule covers the neck of the bottle, cut it cleanly below the protruding
lip and remove the top portion (or simply take the whole thing off). Wipe the
neck of the bottle to remove any mold or mineral salts that may have accumulated.
Using a corkscrew that feels comfortable in your hand (we prefer the Screwpull
or a simple waiter's corkscrew), pull the cork slowly, trying not to disturb
any sediment in the wine, and clean the inside of the bottle neck before pouring.
Should you decant the wine—that is, pour it from the bottle into
a different container for serving? Yes, if the wine has thrown a heavy deposit;
vintage Port and full-bodied, mature reds are the usual culprits here. (But
decanting is useless if the sediment is floating throughout the wine; be sure
to stand the bottle upright for a day or two before opening.) Yes, if you want
to show off an heirloom crystal decanter or hide the identity of the wine. In
all other cases, decanting is useless at best, harmful at worst.
This advice flouts some conventional wisdom, which argues that
young reds (and occasionally other wines as well) benefit from "breathing" and
need the vigorous contact with oxygen that decanting provides in order to "open
up" and show their best. No scientific evidence supports this point of view.
It is true that wines change with exposure to air, but mostly for the worse—old
wines, for example, may deteriorate rapidly after opening. I enjoy following
the whole arc of a wine's evolution, from the first taste until the last sip,
which may come hours later.
Don't forget the glasses. Any container that will hold water can
serve wine, but appropriate stemware not only adds beauty to the table, it also
enables the fullest communication between wine and taster. Austrian glassmaker
Georg Riedel offers special glasses specifically made for dozens of particular
wine types, and investigation has convinced me that glass shape and size can
affect wine taste significantly. If cost is no object, it pays to tailor your
stemware to your wines. On the other hand, even Riedel offers an "all-purpose"
goblet.
In our experience, the best wine glass is a slender goblet of
thin, clear crystal with a long stem on a sturdy base. Heavy cut glass may take
light beautifully, but it blunts the contact between wine and tongue, and examining
wine through colored glass is like gazing at a beautiful friend who's wearing
wraparound sunglasses. The glass should hold 10 to 18 ounces and the bowl should
be biggest at the bottom, tapering to a small opening in order to concentrate
the wine's aromas.
Once you've got the mechanics in place, two more subjective questions
arise: When is the wine ready to drink? What foods make the best match with
the wine you want to serve?
These are long discussions without clear answers. English wine
authority and Wine Spectator columnist Jancis Robinson once wrote a book, Vintage
Timecharts, exploring the maturation curves of great wines. She plotted arcs
on graphs showing time on one axis and wine evolution on the other; the colored
lines curving sinuously across the pages are impressively scientific but hopelessly
confusing. The truth is that different people prefer wines at different stages
of maturity, and different bottles of the same wine may mature at different
rates. Trying to find the "perfect" match between taste and development is like
trying to hit two moving targets with one shot.
Wine and food matching is even more complicated, and fine books
have been written on the topic. However, before you submit to the many complex
and dogmatic rules offered by seemingly authoritative experts, remember that
in the 1890s the best restaurants in America routinely served sweet white Bordeaux,
such as Barsac and Sauternes, with oysters and other shellfish—exactly the opposite
of today's taste.
The best advice is: Eat what you like and drink what you like.
You'll find combinations that work, and they will suggest general rules that
will increase your chances of creating other magical matches. And one day, when
everything comes together—the food, the wine, the company—to create a whole
that far surpasses any single element, you'll be glad you took the time and
the effort to get the details right.
TOP
Judging
a Wine By Its Label
More people choose wines by their labels than are comfortable
admitting it. Novices reach for pretty pictures; snobs demand famous names.
But in fact, a wine label reveals a great deal about the flavors in the bottle.
You can begin your tasting even before you've pulled the cork.
There are basically three kinds of labels: varietal-based, terroir-based
and sheer fantasy. The information they offer—much of it required by law—overlaps
to a large extent, but each one reflects a different approach to winemaking.
Have you ever bought a Chardonnay? Then you're already familiar
with the varietal approach: wines named for the grape variety that makes up
all (or some legally defined minimum) of the juice in the bottle. California
pioneered this method, and most of the New World
producers have adopted it. However, some European wine regions—Alsace
in France, Friuli in Italy,
for example—have traditionally followed this approach.
Most European wines, however, use terroir-based labeling. Terroir
is a French word that comprehends all the physical factors which distinguish
a given vineyard or wine region: its soil, exposure, microclimate, etc. These
wines may be made from a single grape variety (such as Pinot Noir for red wines
in Burgundy) or a blend that may vary by vintage
(such as Bordeaux's
judicious mix of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Cabernet Franc).
Some winemakers have found themselves so frustrated by local wine
regulations—which may dictate certain grape blends or vinification techniques
as prerequisites to obtaining labels, whether based on varietal or terroir—that
they abandon traditional approaches and use labels based simply on fantasy.
In Tuscany,
producers determined to make new-style wines abandoned the terroir-based Chianti
labels for the humble designation vino da tavola (table wine). In California,
winemakers working with the grapes and flexible blending approach of Bordeaux
have given up some varietal-based labels to bottle "Meritage" wines.
Each kind of label gives different clues to the wine inside the
bottle, but all labels include a few basics. For example, the producer's name
is always prominent. Most wineries develop consistent signatures, based on their
location, winemaking skills and marketing goals; once you're familiar with a
winery's profile, the producer's name is perhaps the most reliable indicator
of wine style and quality.
The wine's vintage is almost always shown, too. If you're familiar
with the vintages of a given region, this can be a telling indicator—red Bordeaux
were mostly light and diluted in 1992, but rich and concentrated in 1990. However,
even if you don't know whether a specific vintage was good or bad, knowing how
old a wine is indicates something about its current style: young, fresh and
fruity, or older, smoother and more complex. Most whites, and very many reds,
are best within three years of the vintage; wines that age well increase in
price over time. Beware of old, inexpensive wines.
Most labels indicate the region where the grapes were grown and
the wine made. On terroir-based labels, this is emphasized: The Burgundian appellations
of Nuits-St.-Georges and Vosne-Romanée, for example, are more or less homogenous
and distinctive vineyard areas that, at least in theory, impart recognizable
character to their wines, especially since appellation laws generally regulate
many aspects of grape growing and wine making. Varietal-based labels also generally
indicate appellations (though often in small type), sometimes right down to
the name of the vineyard. But in these production areas regulation tends to
be much looser, and so wines from the same appellation tend to have less in
common. Fantasy labels often avoid any mention of origin at all (some-times
the laws won't permit their indication). But since fantasy wines deliberately
break with the traditions of their regions, origin doesn't mean that much, anyway.
Finally, don't forget the price tag, stuck right there next to
the label. Yes, there may be wide disparities between a wine's cost and its
quality. Wine Spectator takes pains to point these out, whether it's a great
wine for little money or an overpriced bottle to avoid. But more often than
not, there is a rough correlation.
If you're spending under $5 per bottle, the wine is likely to
be simple, offering alcohol as its principal virtue. From $5 to $12, most wines
offer fresh fruit, enough structure to marry well with food and some individual
personality. From $12 to, say, $50, you can expect complex flavors of ripe fruit
and new oak, enough concentration to develop with aging and a distinctive character
stamped with the wine's creator and origin. Pay any more, and you enter into
a rarefied world inhabited by passionate and deep-pocketed collectors; the rest
of us usually pass by with a shake of the head.
Wineries put a lot of effort into their labels. Savvy wine lovers
can decipher what the law says they must say, what the producers want to say
and sometimes more than they intend to say. Spend some time studying labels
before you buy and you'll increase your chances of finding a wine to suit your
tastes.
TOP
Decoding
the Language
of Wine Tasting
Understanding the wine you taste is only half the battle; communicating
your impressions to others in words is just as big a challenge. And since the
wine itself disappears as you drink it, verbal descriptions are the only way
to preserve the pleasure wine provides.
It's easy to ridicule our feeble attempts to put wine into words.
Perhaps the most famous satire on tasting notes is a James Thurber cartoon:
Three people at a dinner table look quizzically at their host, who's got a glass
in his hand and a manic look in his eye, saying, "It's merely a naive domestic
Burgundy,
but I think you'll be amused by its presumption."
In fact, the struggle to develop a lucid and coherent vocabulary
for wine tasting has been going on for centuries. In his landmark study, The
Taste of Wine, Bordeaux
enologist Emile Peynaud traces the slow accretion of terms commonly used to
describe fine wines. Ancient Greeks and Romans wrote about wine, and even in
the 15th century there are references to wines called "good, clean, honest and
commercial." But the true taster's vocabulary really began in the 18th century,
when Bordeaux
wines such as Haut-Brion and Lafite began to be sold at four to five times the
price of ordinary claret, and it became necessary to find words to describe
and justify the difference.
Based on extensive research in the literature of wine, Peynaud
culled about 40 terms used in the late 18th century, ranging from "acrid," "sour"
and "hot," to "lively," "fine" and "strong." More specific flavor descriptors
appear in the 19th century, such as "balsamic," "herbal" and "woody." A manual
for wine merchants published in 1896 used nearly 200 different descriptors,
and today Peynaud recognizes over a thousand terms commonly used to describe
wines. In fact, the vocabulary has gotten a bit out of hand; in Wines: Their
Sensory Evaluation, Maynard Amerine and Edward Roessler list over 300 terms
to avoid in wine description, including the innocuous "charming" and "intense"
and even the antique "lively."
Wine Spectator attempts to use commonsense words to describe wines
in our tasting reports. Our goal is to characterize the wine in general terms,
give several distinctive taste descriptors, compare it to other wines of its
specific type and indicate when it may be drinking at its best. Though writing
tasting notes is more of an art than a science, the descriptions give a fuller
idea of a wine's character than the accompanying score, which locates the wine
on a comparative quality ranking.
Here are recent tasting notes for three wines, all Chardonnays,
that differ widely in quality and character. By "deconstructing" them, I hope
to make all our notes more accessible to readers, and to assist you in developing
your own vocabulary for describing the wines you taste.
Chardonnay Carneros Reserve 1994 (95, $25)
Bold, ripe, smooth and creamy. A real mouthful of Chardonnay.
Its tiers of ripe pear, fig, honey flavors are framed by smokey, toasty oak.
An altogether complex and beautifully crafted wine with a rich butterscotch
aftertaste that still has all those delicious flavors chiming in.
On Wine Spectator's 100-point scale, a wine rating 95 points or
higher is considered "classic, a great wine." This level of quality generates
real enthusiasm in the note, with such positive words as "bold," "beautifully
crafted" and "delicious." The wine is clearly full-bodied, and all the fruit
descriptors indicate it was made from very ripe grapes: Unripe Chardonnay tends
to taste of green apples or citrus fruits. The "smoky, toasty" flavors are typical
results of fermentation and aging in new French oak, an expensive technique
generally reserved for top wines, usually reflected in higher price tags. Despite
the opulent flavors, skillful winemaking has achieved a harmonious whole, and
this Chardonnay shows the ultimate badge of high quality, a long, complex finish.
The note doesn't indicate when to drink the wine, but it sounds irresistible
now.
Chardonnay South Australia
1995 (87, $11)
Bright with fruit and supple in texture, this harmonious white
has a generous dose of peach and pear flavors and a hint of honey on the finish.
An 87-point wine is "very good, a wine with special qualities,"
and this Chardonnay offers virtues without flaws. Australia
is known for a full-bodied, ripe style of winemaking, and that heritage is reflected
in this wine's "supple" texture, "generous" fruit flavors and "hint of honey,"
which all imply fully ripe grapes. Yet the adjectives "bright" and "peach" suggest
some refreshing tartness, so it avoids fatness or dullness. Since there are
no typically oaky descriptors, it may be that new oak wasn't used during vinification;
at least, it doesn't make a strong impression, so wine drinkers who look for
those flavors may want to pass. Overall, the note is positive without being
insistent; you'll enjoy this wine, especially given the reasonable price, but
you probably won't remember it for the rest of your life
Chablis Grand Cru Vaudésir 1994 (75, $45)
Fat, rich, quite heavy, overdone. Full-bodied and quite mature,
as evidenced by its yellow color.
Chablis is located in the northern Burgundy region of France;
it makes white wines from Chardonnay grapes. The vineyards are divided into
three quality levels, with grand cru the best. The 1994 vintage was quite successful
in Chablis, which makes this wine especially disappointing. A wine scoring 70-79
points is "average, a drinkable wine that may have minor flaws." This may be
acceptable in an inexpensive quaffing wine, but not one selling for $45. The
tasting note makes this Vaudésir sound almost like a parody of a great wine:
Instead of being complex, it's "fat"; rather than being well crafted, it's "overdone."
Even the color is off—Chablis is generally a keen green-gold, but this one is
a dull "yellow." And though not even 2 years old, it's already "quite mature,"
lacking life and acidity, a danger sign to wine drinkers who expect top white
Burgundies to improve for years in the cellar. Even the short, choppy style
of the note is a warning to readers who may be impressed by the prestigious
label.
The best way to develop your own wine vocabulary is to write your
own tasting notes. You'll find that certain words recur as descriptors of similar
wines and soon you'll be fluently describing your organoleptic sensations. Of
course, the bottom line of tasting is your own pleasure; your description should
reflect your judgment. It has always been thus. There's something disconcertingly
familiar in one of the earliest known tasting notes, found in a third century
document from Roman Egypt: "The wine taster has declared the Euboean wine to
be unsuitable." We hope few of your wine-tasting experiences fall into the same
dismal category.
9/30/96
Originally printed in Wine Spectator
magazine, September 30, 1996 issue